Headaches

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Most people will experience headache pain at some point in their lives. But for some people, their headaches do not respond to over-the-counter pills, let alone prescription medications.

Types of chronic headaches

Cluster headaches: Severe headaches, typically on one side of the head, that recur in cyclical patterns over several weeks or even months

Migraines: Extreme headache, typically on one side of the head, that can be accompanies by nausea, blurred vision, sensitivity to lights smells and sounds

Occipital neuralgia: Severe headache caused by damage or inflammation to the occipital nerves that run from the spinal cord through the scalp

Chronic headache symptoms

If you've been diagnosed with one of the types of chronic headache pain, you may experience:

Headaches on 15 or more days a month, for at least three months

Daily headache pain

Pain on one side of your head

Nausea or vomiting

Treatment options for chronic headaches at UCLA

When medications cannot relieve the debilitating, throbbing pain of headaches, migraines and occipital neuralgia, you may want to consider surgery. At the UCLA Neuromodulation for Movement Disorders and Pain Program, we offer two surgical options: